Wishful thinking at ITB on Easter Holiday Tourism

Wishful thinking at ITB on Easter Holiday Tourism
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Positive thinking is the key for recovery at ITB Berlin Now,. How much better could be a study assuring the European travel industry that the upcoming Easter Holidays will be just fine?

Easter holidays this year were still possible, both at home and abroad, what was needed was an intelligent testing strategy for the coronavirus. That was the opinion voiced by Norbert Fiebig, president of the German Travel Association (DRV) at the virtual opening press conference of ITB Berlin. โ€œIn the Balearics infections are 32 per 100,000, while in Germany they are over 60. What risk is there in traveling to Majorca? Who wants to be protected from whom? There are enough safe destinationsโ€, Fiebig said. Health safety was easier to organize on a package tour than on Berlin public transport, he added.

According to Claudia Cramer, director of Market Research at the market research institute Statista, about 70 per cent of the population in Germany, the US and China were planning a trip in 2021. Meeting and congregating with friends and family was an important driver there. Outdoor activities and nature experiences were the trend in 2021, she said.

According to Caroline Bremner, head of Travel Research at Euromonitor International, it would take two to five years for the tourism industry to fully recover from the downturn caused by the coronavirus pandemic. Turnover in 2021 could still be expected to be 20 to 40 per cent lower than 2019. A recovery could possibly follow in 2022, at best. However, if vaccination programmes were to stall, it could take a total of five years for the industry to recover. A new feature this year is the Sustainable Travel Index, which for the first time has been used by Euromonitor International to rank destinationsโ€™ sustainability efforts. Sweden was able to secure first place.

According to Martin Ecknig, CEO of Messe Berlin, more than 3,500 exhibitors from 120 countries as well as 800 media representatives and travel bloggers are taking part in ITB Berlin NOW, which is entirely virtual and will run until Friday of this week. โ€œI am more than delighted that we have been able to offer the travel community a global meeting place. This is the first entirely virtual edition of the Worldโ€™s Leading Travel Trade Show”, Ecknig said on Tuesday morning. Whereas ITB Berlin NOW is devoted exclusively to trade visitors this year, travel-hungry consumers can gain inspiration for their upcoming vacation at the Berlin Travel Festival. The partner event is taking place parallel with ITB and is also in an entirely virtual format. Every evening will focus on a single travel topic.

In the long term, Ecknig said, a virtual trade show could not fully replace an in-person event. โ€œFor that reason, in 2022 we want to combine the key elements of an in-person and virtual trade show “, he said. He was confident that the tourism industry would recover and find a new direction in the future.

About the author

Avatar of Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen T Steinmetz

Juergen Thomas Steinmetz has continuously worked in the travel and tourism industry since he was a teenager in Germany (1977).
He founded eTurboNews in 1999 as the first online newsletter for the global travel tourism industry.

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